Lily Nicksay might have been just five-years-old when she joined the cast of "Boy Meets World," but her character, Cory's (Ben Savage) little sister Morgan, quickly became a favorite. Rumors surfaced that the Disney Channel is planning a sequel series tentatively called "Girls Meets World" and Nicksay wants in.

TVLine first reported that the Disney Channel is in the beginning stages of developing a "Boy Meets World" sequel." The new show will center around Riley, the preteen daughter of Cory Matthews (Ben Savage) and Topanga Lawrence (Danielle Fishel). Savage and Fishel are allegedly in talks to reprise their roles.

TMZ caught up with Nicksay to see if she'd want to join the "Boy Meets World" family again.

"I'd love to talk [to Disney] about being a part of it," the actress, now 24 years old, told TMZ. She is reportedly very excited about the Disney sequel, but revealed that she has not been approached by the network yet.

Lily Nicksay played Morgan Matthews, Cory and Eric's little sister, from 1993 to 1995. After that, she was replaced by older actress Lindsay Ridgeway. Nicksay went on to appear in Michelle Pfeiffer and Robert Redford's 1996 film "Up Close & Personal" and then scored smaller roles in "The Negotiator," "Judging Amy" and "8 Simple Rules."

"Boy Meets World" aired from 1993 to 2000 and took viewers through Cory's roller coaster adolescence and ended with him and longtime love Topanga getting married and moving in together.

Savage and Fishel have both been mum about the possibility of signing on for "Girl Meets World." Fishel even played coy with fans, tweeting, "Just want you guys to know that @BenSavage and I have talked and we've decided...Thanksgiving is going to be delicious this year!"

Question: This Boy Meets World sequel series is all I have been able to think about since Friday. Anything else you can tell us about it? —Amanda
Ausiello: I’m going to call this Amanda Meets Scoop: Cory and Topanga’s Girl Meets World kiddo is a 13-year-old named Riley who’s full of life, super positive and very loyal to her friends. She’s got a slightly older brother, Elliot, and – this may make fans very happy– her dad is her history teacher. Yup: The Feen-ee has become the Feeny! The show also is casting Riley’s best friend, a dark, edgy, acerbic girl named Maya who’s probably not as pessimistic as she seems.

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Death To Generic, Boring, Inoffensive, Hype-Approved Signatures And The Line Lengths That Can Accommodate Them

If there's one main character and they have two best friends, usually one is male and the other female. And a good chance they're difference races.

__________________I was at some diplomatic party once. Got to talking to this princess who told me that when it came to Superman, I was missing the point. She told me, "His real strength lay in his generous spirit and sense of what's fair." - King Faraday
"He’s much more of a working class superhero, which is why we ended the whole book with the image of a laboring Superman. He’s Everyman operating on a sci–fi Paul Bunyan scale." - Grant Morrison

The thing is with Disney Channel shows, is the acting tends to be very, very, very broad.

Well their show do mostly feature children as the leads that they it's not like they can make "kid type" versions of shows like Friends or Seinfeld.

And in fact I sometimes late night find myself watching reruns of The Suite Life and Wizards Of Waverly Place even though the humor is not "sophisticated" I do find them a lot funnier than most of the network sitcoms.

__________________Self-contained stories part of a larger story is where its at. Not this writing for the trade nonsense. If you're going to write for the trade, don't release it in individual issues. Just release the trade.

Well their show do mostly feature children as the leads that they it's not like they can make "kid type" versions of shows like Friends or Seinfeld.

And in fact I sometimes late night find myself watching reruns of The Suite Life and Wizards Of Waverly Place even though the humor is not "sophisticated" I do find them a lot funnier than most of the network sitcoms.

On CBS, maybe.

__________________

Death To Generic, Boring, Inoffensive, Hype-Approved Signatures And The Line Lengths That Can Accommodate Them

I do agree about the Wizards of Waverly Place comment. Better than any network show with a laugh track. (HIMYM not included) And it has Fred Savage as a director for many episodes. If they make the tone of Girl Meets World the same as the series finale of Wizards of Waverly Place it will be a great show.

If there's one main character and they have two best friends, usually one is male and the other female. And a good chance they're difference races.

And one of the friends will go with practically everything the main character says while the other friend is the exact opposite and lets the main character know when they're full of it most of the time.

__________________"I hate you, I hate you, I don't even know you and I hate your guts. I hope all the bad things in life happen to you, and nobody else but you."

Which is why they should follow the Wizards of Waverly Place model. It was about the family and two siblings only had one friend who start dating at the end of the series and one of them actually lives with the family kind of like Shawn. And the siblings didn't date their friends only actually boyfriend/girlfriend.

and the one friend will be hopelessly in love with the protagonist, unrequited of course, and won't find the strength to come clean until the last episode...or the movie.

__________________I was at some diplomatic party once. Got to talking to this princess who told me that when it came to Superman, I was missing the point. She told me, "His real strength lay in his generous spirit and sense of what's fair." - King Faraday
"He’s much more of a working class superhero, which is why we ended the whole book with the image of a laboring Superman. He’s Everyman operating on a sci–fi Paul Bunyan scale." - Grant Morrison